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Jupiters månar : Månar och mindre himlakroppar

Arnadottir, Anna LU ; Bloomer, Edward ; Cronemyr, Emil ; Bowers, Brad and Gustavsson, Martin (2019)
Abstract
As we look up at night we see that our Earth has one moon orbiting it, the one we call the Moon. We have explored our moon with orbiters, rovers and astronauts, mapping it and studying its history.
Other planets also have moons in orbit around them and these may look quite different from the Earth's moon. Some are small and look like asteroids, others are so icy they would become comets if they plunged on an elliptical orbit towards the inner solar system.

This full dome planetarium production; "Jovian Moons" is a part of a series titled "Moons Beyond Counting". In this installment we look closer at the four moons observed orbiting Jupiter by Galileo Galilei over 400 years ago.
Abstract (Swedish)
Vi tittar upp nattetid och ser att vår Jord har en måne kretsande runt sig. Denna kallar vi Månen, och den har vi utforskat med hjälp av rymdsonder, olika landare och med hjälp av Apollo-astronauterna.
Andra planeter har också månar kretsande runtom sig. Månar som ser helt annorlunda ut än vad vår egen Måne, vissa är små och ser ut som asteroider medans andra är så isiga att de skulle kunna förvandlas till kometer, om de befann sig för nära Solen.

Denna fulldome planetariumproduktion; "Jupiters månar", tar vi en nära titt på de månar som Galileo Galilei såg kretsa runt Jupiter för över 400 år sedan
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
actor
Cronemyr, Emil
author
; ; and
organization
alternative title
Jovian Moons : Moons Beyond Counting
publishing date
type
Non-textual form
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Planetarium, Planetariumvisning, Planetarium, Planetarium show
language
Swedish
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Planetarium show series "Moons Beyond Counting" was produced in close collaboration with Royal Observatory Greenwich, London.
id
45d401ff-c31f-4962-9902-8a86d0b71b6b
date added to LUP
2020-12-07 15:09:50
date last changed
2020-12-08 11:50:31
@misc{45d401ff-c31f-4962-9902-8a86d0b71b6b,
  abstract     = {{As we look up at night we see that our Earth has one moon orbiting it, the one we call the Moon.  We have explored our moon with orbiters, rovers and astronauts, mapping it and studying its history.<br/>Other planets also have moons in orbit around them and these may look quite different from the Earth's moon.  Some are small and look like asteroids, others are so icy they would become comets if they plunged on an elliptical orbit towards the inner solar system. <br/><br/>This full dome planetarium production; "Jovian Moons" is a part of a series titled "Moons Beyond Counting".  In this installment we look closer at the four moons observed orbiting Jupiter by Galileo Galilei over 400 years ago.}},
  author       = {{Arnadottir, Anna and Bloomer, Edward and Cronemyr, Emil and Bowers, Brad and Gustavsson, Martin}},
  keywords     = {{Planetarium; Planetariumvisning; Planetarium; Planetarium show}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  month        = {{07}},
  title        = {{Jupiters månar : Månar och mindre himlakroppar}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}